For more and more students and their parents in Greater Cincinnati, summer break can't come soon enough.That's because there was yet another school evacuation caused by a bomb threat.Monday's scare happened at South Dearborn High School in Aurora. Superintendent John Mehrle says someone threatened the school via email.Watch this storyStudents at the high school were dismissed early and, as a result of transportation issues, students at other schools in the South Dearborn Community School district were also sent home before the final bell.The threat targeting South Dearborn High came just days after police arrested Devin Sandlin, 19, and charged him with making a threat against the same school.WLWT News 5 investigative reporter Todd Dykes talked to teens at the high school who shared what it's like when students hear the words "lockdown" and then "evacuate.""Immediately we turned off the lights," Kodi Hiltenbeitel, a junior, said. "I didn't know what kind of threat it was, so we were all just kind of sitting there at first. And then everyone started freaking out and then I kind of climbed under a desk because I didn't know what was going on."Hiltenbeitel's classmate, Evan Wynn, said when they heard their principal's voice speaking through the intercom, they knew something wasn't right.Wynn said something in the principal’s voice sounded odd."My first thought was how am I going to get out of here?" he said.Wynn and his friends who were playing basketball at the Aurora Community Center are just the latest students forced to wonder how they would escape chaos in the classroom.In Warren County, Ohio, three teens and a 12-year-old girl are in a juvenile facility and will stay there for at least another week, all in connection with threats against schools in and around Lebanon.Andrew Stadler, 18, a student at Springboro High, also in Warren County, is facing two felony charges for allegedly writing a bomb threat on a bathroom wall at his school last month.Last week, Warren County Prosecutor Dave Fornshell told WLWT that his office will not go lightly on someone who hints at violence against a school."We're going to bring the hammer down on you and you will face significant punishment," Fornshell said. "None of us are going to take the risk of putting everybody else's life at risk because you were stupid. I'm not going to take the noose off of your neck and put it on my neck because you made a stupid threat.""I think it should be taken really seriously even if it's a joke," Branden Powers, a junior at South Dearborn High School, said.Powers said threats that force entire school buildings to be evacuated are a huge distraction, especially late in the year when testing is often in full swing."Just trying to get work done and everything and just interruptions in the classroom," Powers said. "It's been a lot lately. Too many interruptions, I think."John Mehrle and other school officials will do what they can to help students feel a sense of normalcy during the school year's remaining days.He also said students returning to South Dearborn High School on Tuesday can expect to see extra security.Prosecutor Aaron Negangard points out threats that force schools to evacuate are not common in Dearborn County.But even though they're infrequent, Negangard agrees with the get-tough stance his counterpart in Warren County has taken when it comes to threats made against students and the school buildings where they learn.

AURORA, Ind. —

For more and more students and their parents in Greater Cincinnati, summer break can't come soon enough.

That's because there was yet another school evacuation caused by a bomb threat.

Students at the high school were dismissed early and, as a result of transportation issues, students at other schools in the South Dearborn Community School district were also sent home before the final bell.

WLWT News 5 investigative reporter Todd Dykes talked to teens at the high school who shared what it's like when students hear the words "lockdown" and then "evacuate."

"Immediately we turned off the lights," Kodi Hiltenbeitel, a junior, said. "I didn't know what kind of threat it was, so we were all just kind of sitting there at first. And then everyone started freaking out and then I kind of climbed under a desk because I didn't know what was going on."

Hiltenbeitel's classmate, Evan Wynn, said when they heard their principal's voice speaking through the intercom, they knew something wasn't right.

Wynn said something in the principal’s voice sounded odd.

"My first thought was how am I going to get out of here?" he said.

Wynn and his friends who were playing basketball at the Aurora Community Center are just the latest students forced to wonder how they would escape chaos in the classroom.

"We're going to bring the hammer down on you and you will face significant punishment," Fornshell said. "None of us are going to take the risk of putting everybody else's life at risk because you were stupid. I'm not going to take the noose off of your neck and put it on my neck because you made a stupid threat."

"I think it should be taken really seriously even if it's a joke," Branden Powers, a junior at South Dearborn High School, said.

Powers said threats that force entire school buildings to be evacuated are a huge distraction, especially late in the year when testing is often in full swing.

"Just trying to get work done and everything and just interruptions in the classroom," Powers said. "It's been a lot lately. Too many interruptions, I think."

John Mehrle and other school officials will do what they can to help students feel a sense of normalcy during the school year's remaining days.

He also said students returning to South Dearborn High School on Tuesday can expect to see extra security.

Prosecutor Aaron Negangard points out threats that force schools to evacuate are not common in Dearborn County.

But even though they're infrequent, Negangard agrees with the get-tough stance his counterpart in Warren County has taken when it comes to threats made against students and the school buildings where they learn.